The following study was undertaken to better understand the mechanisms that

The following study was undertaken to better understand the mechanisms that relate the homeostatic set point of the peripheral T cell population to energy availability in mice. increased survival and that all na?ve CD8+T cells upregulated CD127, regardless of initial expression levels. Corticosterone levels were elevated in malnourished mice and this correlated in time with peripheral T cell up-regulation of CD127 and the diminishment of the peripheral T cell pool. Overall, these data suggest a model in which CD127 levels are up-regulated quickly during malnourishment, thereby increasing the scavenge rate of IL-7, and providing a mechanism to quickly adjust the total number of T cells during malnutrition. studies [18]. A key survival factor for T cells, IL-7 is secreted by fibroblastic stromal cells in the bone marrow and lymph nodes as well as by epithelial cells in the thymus and intestine [19]. The available amount of IL-7 in the central lymphoid organs was thought to be primarily regulated by the rate that it is scavenged by T cells [20]. However, recent studies using IL-7 reporter mice suggest that IL-7 expression is increased by lymph node stromal cells during lymphopenia [21]. In certain contexts, some cytokines can also affect production of IL-7 the IL-7 receptor, which is a heterodimer comprised of CD127 (also known as IL-7R) and the common gamma chain (c) [25]. T cell expression of CD127 is thought to be highly regulated; CD127 is up-regulated in the absence of IL-7 and conversely down-regulated after contact with it [25]. In addition, glucocorticoids, type I interferons, and TNF- can up-regulate CD127 expression; while several cytokines (many of which signal through receptors partially comprised of c) down-regulate CD127 in T cells [20]. As aforementioned, maintaining a large diversity of adaptive immune cells is necessary for survival given the unknown nature of pathogens that might be encountered. Considering the energetic challenges that this adaptation poses, lymphocytes are maintained as na?ve, quiescent cells in low numbers until particular cells are called upon to defend against a cognate antigen. However, it is less clear how T cell homeostasis is linked to energy availability during drastic energy shortages, as occurs in malnourishment. The following study was undertaken to better understand the impact of short-term malnutrition on T cell homeostasis, with particular attention focused on the CD127/IL-7 signaling dynamic of peripheral T cells. 2.?Materials and methods IPI-493 2.1. Mice All mice were housed in the mouse facility at Randolph-Macon College in accordance with approved Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee guidelines and protocols and with the NIH guide for the care and use of laboratory animals. For each individual experiment, the mice were placed on malnourishment as follows. Male and female C57BLJ/6 mice ranging in age from 8 to 15 weeks old were singly housed. The unrestricted intake of chow was monitored for each mouse two weeks prior to the initiation of malnourishment. Mice were randomly assigned to each treatment group. Malnourished (MAL) mice received 35% less Teklad Global 18% Protein Rodent Diet (Harlan Laboratories) by weight while (AL) control mice had unrestricted access to FN1 the same chow. The dieting period lasted one week for all studies with the exception of the death-by-neglect study in which the dieting period lasted 6 weeks. Although some individual malnourished mice lost up to 28% of their body weight, on average, malnourished mice lost 10%, while control mice gained 3% of their original body weight over the course of one week. In all experiments, mice were euthanized CO2 overdose followed by cervical dislocation. 2.2. Flow cytometry After 1 week of the malnourishment or control diet, cells were isolated from the spleens of male and female C57BL/6J mice aged 10C13 weeks after a malnourished or control diet for one week. Red blood cells were removed from splenocyte preparations by incubation with ACK lysing buffer (0.15?M NH4Cl; 10?mM KHCO3; 0.1?mM EDTA). The ammonium chloride in the buffer lyses red cells with minimal effect on lymphocytes. After osmotic lysis, one million cells were incubated with Fc-blocking reagent (Purified Anti-Mouse CD16/CD32 (2.4G2)) (Tonbo, California, USA). Surface protein markers used to distinguish particular immune cell subsets IPI-493 are as follows: T cells (CD3+ (145C2C11, eBioscience, California, USA)), B cells (CD19+ (eBio1D3, eBioscience, California, USA)), granulocytes (CD11b+ (M1/70, eBioscience, California, USA) Gr1+ (RB6C8C5, Invitrogen, USA)), and monocytes (CD11b+Gr1-). Na?ve (CD44lo) and memory (CD44high) CD4+ (GK1.5, eBioscience, California, IPI-493 USA) and CD8+ (53C6.7, Southern Biotech, Alabama, USA) T cells were distinguished with the surface protein CD44 (1M7, eBioscience, California, USA). After staining, cells were washed and acquired on a BD C6 Accuri cytometer (BD Biosciences, California, USA). Gating strategies used to determine cell percentages are IPI-493 detailed in Fig. S1. The intensity of CD127 surface protein expression was assessed with an antibody to CD127 (A7R34, eBioscience, California, USA). The total number of na?ve (CD44lo) and memory (CD44hi) CD4+ and CD8+T cells within the spleen and lymph node was calculated by multiplying the percentage of each subpopulation by the total.